- Theodor Habicht
Theodor Habicht (
April 4 1898 -January 31 1944 ) was a leading political figure inNazi Germany . He played a leading role in theAustria n movement.Born in
Wiesbaden and educated in his hometown andBerlin , he volunteered for theGerman Imperial Army in 1915, serving on the Western Front and atIsonzo inItaly .Philip Rees , "Biographical Dictionary of the Extreme Right Since 1890 ", p. 169] Briefly involved withcommunism after his 1919demobilization he soon took part in skirmishes against theSpartacist League before settling into various low-level white-collar jobs.Habicht joined the
Nazi Party in 1926 and established a number of local journals for the group, whilst also serving as a member of theHesse-Nassau assembly and the leader of the Nazis on Wiesbaden council. By 1931 he had also been elected to the Reichstag for Nassau and theoretically retained this position until 1938.Under orders from
Adolf Hitler he was sent to Austria in 1931 as "Landesinspekteur" to oversee the reorganization of the Nazi Party in the country, and before long he was the effective leader of the group, despite official control resting withAlfred Proksch . InitiallyEngelbert Dollfuß attempted a conciliation, notably offering Habicht two Nazi cabinet seats, before trying to get Italy to exert pressure on Hitler to restrain Habicht's anti-government activities. [H. James Burgwyn, "Italian Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period, 1918-1940", Greenwood Publishing Group, 1997, p. 88] Habicht was deported in 1933 after the Austrian government finally decided to ban the Nazi Party outright. In response Habicht set up a leadership-in-exile inMunich which directed a campaign of terror against the Dollfuß regime which culminated in a failed coup attempt in the murder of Dollfuß in July 1934. An unpopular figure with many of the Austrians, he was excluded from the country after this failure as Hitler placed the blame on Habicht, who had been responsible for determining the details of the coup attempt.Severely discredited by the failure, Habicht went into seclusion in the
Harz mountains before being allowed to take up the post of mayor ofWittenberg in 1937. His reputation partially restored, Habicht returned to a more important role in the Nazi Party in 1939 when he was appointed Undersecretary in the Foreign Department of the Nazi Party. As part of his duties he was sent toNorway in 1940 to investigate the organization of government in the newly occupied territory and he called for the removal of theVidkun Quisling government and its replacement with an administrative council. Initially he had hoped to give any regime more legitimacy by placing the popularPaal Olav Berg at its head rather than the minor figure of Quisling, although Berg rejected any such settlement. [Hans Fredrik Dahl, "Quisling: A Study in Treachery", Cambridge University Press, 1999, pp. 182-186] However, when his plans were rejected byJohan Nygaardsvold andHaakon VII of Norway Hitler once again lost faith in Habicht and ordered him into theWehrmacht . He spent the remainder of his life on the Eastern Front and died in action there atNevel .References
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